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Dokumen

The document defines and provides examples of different types of nouns in English, including common nouns, proper nouns, compound nouns, countable nouns, uncountable nouns, collective nouns, concrete nouns, abstract nouns, and gerunds. Common nouns name general people, places or things, while proper nouns name specific ones. Countable nouns can be counted while uncountable nouns cannot. Collective nouns refer to groups, and concrete nouns can be detected by senses versus abstract nouns being ideas. Gerunds are verb forms used as nouns.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
93 views2 pages

Dokumen

The document defines and provides examples of different types of nouns in English, including common nouns, proper nouns, compound nouns, countable nouns, uncountable nouns, collective nouns, concrete nouns, abstract nouns, and gerunds. Common nouns name general people, places or things, while proper nouns name specific ones. Countable nouns can be counted while uncountable nouns cannot. Collective nouns refer to groups, and concrete nouns can be detected by senses versus abstract nouns being ideas. Gerunds are verb forms used as nouns.
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Types of Nouns

A noun is a word that functions as the name of something. Nouns are the most common class of
word in English.
Below we have a list of the different types of nouns in English with an explanation of what each
one is and with examples of each type of noun.

Common Nouns
Common nouns are used to name a GENERAL type of person, place or thing.

Common nouns can be divided into smaller classes such as countable and uncountable nouns,
concrete and abstract nouns and collective nouns.
Examples of common nouns: girl, city, animal, friend, house, food

Proper Nouns
Proper nouns are used to name a SPECIFIC person, place or thing. In English, proper nouns
begin with a capital letter. Proper nouns do not normally have a determiner before them
(e.g. the London, the Mary etc.) though there are some exceptions (e.g. Is she the Mary that we
met at the conference?).

Examples of proper nouns: John, London, Pluto, Monday, France

Compound Nouns
Compound nouns are two or more words that create a noun. Compound nouns are sometimes
one word (haircut), words joined by a hyphen (son-in-law) or as separate words (bus stop). The
main stress is normally on the first part of the compound word (sunglasses, swimming pool)

Examples of compound nouns: toothbrush, rainfall, sailboat, mother-in-law, well-being, alarm


clock, credit card

Countable Nouns
Countable nouns are nouns that CAN be counted. They have a singular and a plural form and
can be used with a number. Sometimes countable nouns are called count nouns.
Examples of countable nouns: car, desk, cup, house, bike, eye, butterfly

Uncountable Nouns
Uncountable nouns are nouns that CANNOT be counted. These are sometimes called Mass
Nouns. Uncountable nouns often refer to:

 substances: paper, wood, plastic


 liquids: milk, oil , juice
 gases: air, oxygen
 abstract ideas: happiness, time, information

Examples of uncountable nouns: water, coffee, cheese, sand, furniture, skin, wool, gold, fur

Collective Nouns
Collective nouns are words that refer to a set or group of people, animals or things.
Examples of collective nouns: staff, team, crew, herd, flock, bunch

Concrete Nouns
Concrete nouns are nouns which refer to people and things that exist physically and that at least
one of the senses can detect (can be seen, felt, heard, smelled/smelt, or tasted).

Examples of concrete nouns: dog, tree, apple, moon, coin, sock, ball, water

Abstract Nouns
Abstract nouns are nouns that have no physical existence and are not concrete. They refer to
ideas, emotions or concepts so you CANNOT see, touch, hear, smell or taste something that is
an abstract noun. Many abstract nouns are uncountable.

Examples of abstract nouns: love, time, happiness, bravery, creativity, justice, freedom, speed

Gerunds
A gerund, sometimes called a verbal noun, is a noun formed from a verb. Since all gerunds end
in -ing, they are sometimes confused as being a verb (present participle).

Example: Running is good for you.


Here running looks like a verb because of its -ingending but it is a noun (gerund) because we are
talking about the concept of running, we are talking about a thing.
Examples of gerunds: reading, writing, dancing, thinking, flying

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